World Heritage Sites in Canada

Updated on Aug 01, 2024 | Canada eTA


Niagara Falls is a small, pleasant city in Ontario,Canada, which lies on the bank of the Niagara Riverand is known for the famous natural spectacle created by the three waterfalls grouped as Niagara Falls. The three waterfalls are situated at the border between New York in the United States and Ontario in Canada. Out of the three, only the largest one, which is known as Horseshoe Falls, is located in Canada, and the other smaller two, known as American Falls and Bridal Veil Falls, are located entirely within the USA. The largest of the three Niagara Waterfalls, Horseshoe Falls has the most powerful flow rate of any waterfall in North America. The tourist area in the city of Niagara Falls is concentrated at the Waterfalls but the city also has many other tourist attractions, such as observation towers, hotels, souvenir shops, museums, water parks, theatres, etc. So when visiting the city there are many places for tourists to visit apart from the Falls. Here is a list of the places to see in Niagara Falls.

Writing on Stone, Alberta

Sacred to the Niitsítapi indigenous people of Canada as well as to some other aboriginal tribes, Writing on Stone is a Provincial Park in Alberta, Canada, which is famous for being the site of the most rock art found anywhere in North America. Nowhere in Alberta’s park system is so much prairie land protected as at Writing on Stone. Besides, the park does not just protect the natural environment by preserving this site but also contributes toward preserving First Nations art, including rock painting and carving, as cultural and historical artifacts. These include numerous petroglyphs and artworks that go into thousands. Apart from witnessing some fascinating historical art, tourists can also participate in such recreational activities here as camping, hiking, canoeing and kayaking on the Milk River that runs through the place.

Pimachiowin Aki

A part of the Boreal Forest, which is a snow or coniferous forest in Canada, Pimachiowin Aki is an ancestral land belonging to a few First Nations tribes that are found in parts of the forest located in Manitoba and Ontario. Including also two provincial parks, the Manitoba Provincial Wilderness Park and the Ontario Woodland Caribou Provincial Park, the site is important both culturally and for the natural resources at its disposal. Meaning 'the land that gives life', this site was the first ever mixed World Heritage Site in Canada, which means that it consisted of things that made it both of natural importance as well as of cultural importance. The site is also significant because it is still under indigenous stewardship, which means the indigenous people haven’t had to leave their land.

Dinosaur Provincial Park

Around a 2 hour drive away from the city of Calgary in Canada, this Park is located in the Red Deer River Valley, an area famous for its badland terrain, which is a dry terrain, consisting of steep slopes, next to no vegetation, almost no solid deposits on rocks, and most importantly, soft sedimentary rocks set in clay-like soil which have all been eroded to quite an extent by wind and water. The Park is famous worldwide and a World Heritage Site because it is one of the most anthropologically significant places in the world. This is because it is one of the richest dinosaur fossil sites in the world, so much so that as many as 58 dinosaur species have been found here and more than 500 specimens removed to museums, etc. If you visit this tourist attraction in Canada, you can also go to the visitor centre located inside where you will get to learn more about the history and geology of the place and about the age when dinosaurs existed.

Old Town Lunenburg

This is a port town in Nova Scotia that was one of the first British Protestant Settlements in Canada, founded in 1753. House to the largest fish processing plant in Canada, Old Town Lunenburg is mainly famous for the 19th-century feel the Town has, especially because of the surviving architecture from the time. More than its historical architecture, however, it is deemed a UNESCO World Heritage Site because it is considered to be one of the first attempts at planned colonial settlements in North America by the British. The status of a World Heritage Site is also to preserve the town's traditions, which include not only the architecture and buildings it has inherited but also the kind of economy it has inherited, which is dependent mainly on fishing, an economic undertaking whose future is uncertain in today’s world. It is also a National Historic Site of Canada.

Landscape of Grand Pré

Landscape of Grand Pré

A rural community in Nova Scotia, Grand Pré's name means Great Meadow. Located at the edge of the Annapolis Valley, Grand Pré stands on a peninsula that juts into the Minas Basin. It is full of dyked farm fields, surrounded by Gaspereau River and Cornwallis River. Founded in 1680, the community was established by an Acadian, that is, a French settler from the Acadia region of North America. He brought with him other Acadians who started a traditional farming settlement in Grand Pré, which was an exceptional task because this coastal area had one of the highest tides in the whole world. The farming alone makes the place have great historical significance, but apart from that, Grand Pré was an amazing settlement because the Acadian diaspora who arrived here lived in complete harmony with the indigenous people of the area. This inheritance of multiculturalism and traditional farming is what makes the place a special World Heritage Site.

Rideau Canal

Where is the Rideau Canal located?

The Rideau Canal is located in Ottawa, Ontario.

Built-in the 19th century, the Rideau Canal has become a landmark in the heart of Ottawa. Mainly this canal was built for military operations. Its essential motive was to be a secured supply route during the war.

In 2007, the Rideau Canal was declared as a "UNESCO World Heritage Site" in Canada. Since then, many nearby and international travellers have visited the Rideau Canal to study more approximately about European technology and North American canal construction techniques in the nineteenth century.

The highlight of this canal is that the locks and dams were built by hand.

Gros Morne National Park

Where is Gros Morne National Park located?

Newfoundland's west coast is home to Gros Morne National Park.

This park is a masterpiece of nature and an ocean of knowledge for anyone who wants to approach the technique of plate tectonics through visualization.

Gros Morne National Park is certainly one of the most divine parks in Canada with its beautiful fjords, glaciers, heavy forests, and more. This park is a paradise for all adventurous visitors as it gives many possibilities for different sports including swimming, flora and fauna viewing, hiking, and many others.


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